Seeing Green

My wife and I recently attended a class on making green smoothies. I have to admit, I was a bit apprehensive beforehand. OK, actually I was a LOT apprehensive!

I had flashbacks to the days when wheat grass and carrot juice drinks were popular. My memories of those? Blecchh!!! I am happy to say I was very pleasantly surprised at the smoothies we made. None of them were at all nasty tasting, and some of them were downright yummy! It is definitely a taste that grows on you.

Green smoothies are now all the rage in the raw food movement. Proponents claim a plethora of health benefits come from drinking them. There’s no doubt they are high in fiber and loaded with antioxidants and phytochemicals. Many greens are also high in Omega-3 fatty acids, and blending the greens helps the body digest and assimilate the nutrients more easily.

The general recipe is to mix 60% fruit with 40% greens, and blend in a good strong blender with water or other liquid. The Vita-Mix blenders are popular, but our Osterizer does a good job too. Any mix of fruits and greens can be used. My goal is to get more fruit and greens in my diet, so variety is a good thing. The smoothie in the above photo had apple, banana, and mango for fruit (the banana and mango were frozen), and raw turnips greens and arugula (fresh from the garden). The taste was amazing! I used about 1 cup of cold water for the liquid.

Green smoothies don’t always look green. If you use blueberries or blackberries, the resulting smoothie may wind up purple or even brown. While a nice green color may be visually appealing, it really doesn’t matter. A purple, red or brown smoothie is good for you too!

Mike, it sounds like a good way to use whatever greens happen to be available. Right now we have kale, turnips greens, arugula and lettuce. Later on we will have pac choi, tatsoi and spinach. The fruit sure helps take the bite out of the greens.

They are quite refreshing aren’t they? I make mine in a standard blender too, but I am wanting a Blendtec in a bad way. My friend loves sweet potato greens in her green smoothies, but I never tried them (the greens) that way, I have only used Kale and MacroGreens powder.

Kelly, I’ve never eaten sweet potato greens, but I know the deer and rabbits love them raw! This afternoon I had a smoothie with apple, banana, raspberries, turnips greens, lettuce and some French sorrel. They are habit-forming!

Oh, wow, I’ll have to try this, Villager! I never heard of a “green” smoothie before, but I generally have trouble meeting the recommended amount of leafy greens in my diet, so it seems to be a great trick for people like me. I already indulge in the occasional fruit smoothie and have some frozen fruit in the fridge, too. 🙂